Latest Articles
-
“We know how to get through this.”Écône Diary: Thursday 2nd July, the Feast of the Visitation The momentous day of Wednesday, 1st July, the Feast of the Precious Blood, concluded with Second Pontifical Vespers of the Precious Blood of Jesus and Benediction. The American Rector of Saint Thomas Aquinas Seminary in Virginia, the newly-consecrated Bishop Michael Goldade, gave a short sermon in which he shared how touched the newly-consecrated bishops were by the fidelity, prayers and sacrifices of the faithful, clergy and religious.After invoking the life-giving abundance of the Catholic Church, he continued:Today we see such wreckage. If the Catholic...
-
The author's aim was to instruct students of American jurisprudence in the fundamentals of that system. Admirably adapted to the needs of such, his treatise addressed itself to those most ardent of students, practitioners themselves. Hence it soon attained, and since has held, the distinction of the best general treatise on American law. Herein are presented, as parts of an organic whole, the international relations of our government, its constitutional organization, and the legal results flowing from the exercise of its executive, legislative, and judicial functions. Without deviation from its systematic course, the discussion passes from the Union to the...
-
A truck driver with no legal right to be in the country, let alone behind the wheel of an 18-wheeler, killed Pennsylvania State Trooper Michael E. Pahira Jr. Wednesday morning while he was doing his job. Pahira, 44, had served with the Pennsylvania State Police since 2007, most recently as a motor carrier enforcement inspector. He was inspecting a semi-truck on Interstate 81 in Schuylkill County when another truck ran off the road, slammed into his patrol car and the vehicle he was checking, then struck him directly. Both trucks erupted in flames. Pahira died at a local hospital a...
-
To use language to obscure reality is to show ‘indifference regarding the truth’— to lie to the public and cease to treat our fellow citizens as equals.” —Justice Clarence Thomas Now that the grand 250th USA birthday party is over — the speeches, the shrieking warplanes, the dazzling fireworks, the speeches and strawberry shortcake — there is only one way this thing can go. What thing? The war for the soul of the nation. Some mysterious somebody is behind the surging “Democratic-Socialist” craze. Somebody is paying for it. It’s a last-ditch drive to marshal the disaffected, under-employed young voters, choking...
-
Temperatures could climb to 30 degrees in parts of the country this week, with Met Éireann issuing a weather advisory over expected heatwave conditions. The weather advisory, which is in place from Wednesday until Tuesday next week, states that daytime maxima will “widely exceed 25 degrees Celsius with values climbing to the high 20s or even low 30s in places from Friday”. It adds that possible tropical nights may occur in places this weekend and that there is also the chance of some thunderstorms later this week. Nationally, there will be a lot of dry, settled weather with plenty of...
-
Maine Democrat Senate candidate Graham Platner abruptly canceled multiple town hall events as new damaging information is about to be released. Platner, the scandal-plagued Democrat with a Nazi tattoo, may drop out of the Senate race. Per The Maine Wire: Augusta town hall for last night – CANCELED Gorham town hall tonight – CANCELED Sanford town hall tonight – CANCELED Platner went into hiding last month as one scandal after another continued to rock his campaign. As Platner was hiding from the press, The New York Times dropped a nasty hit piece on him. The New York Times dropped a...
-
Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Graham Platner has postponed a string of events Sunday and Monday as rumors circulate among Maine Democrats and over social media about another potentially damaging story to come about the oyster farmer’s past.Platner postponed a planned town hall in Augusta on Sunday after reportedly missing a Fourth of July parade in Machias. The Gorham Democrats on Monday morning said a town hall set for Monday was postponed because Platner was “not feeling well.” And a Sanford town hall previously listed on Mobilize was later taken down.The Platner campaign did not immediately respond to a request for...
-
Massachusetts US District Judge Myong Joun struck down the Trump Administration's attempt to disallow public service workers from receiving debt relief for working with employers that are deemed to have a "substantial illegal purpose." The Judge said that "the Biden Administration classified student debtors working with organizations like USAID as eligible for debt forgiveness. Later evidence indicating that some of these employers were engaged in efforts to promote illegal immigration and terrorists cells cannot undo the promised debt relief. Trying to single out these activities for punitive action can be seen as an impermissible suppression of their right to freedom...
-
Many Washington state daycare providers receive large taxpayer subsidies, but an investigation by The Center Square found several that had few, if any, children and at least one establishment that received hundreds of thousands of dollars despite residents at the listed address indicating it was not a daycare. Yet politicians charged with overseeing the spending continue to publicly say there is no problem with improper payments to the daycares and, instead, have been criticizing journalists for investigating the potential fraud. No state official has announced an investigation or crackdown though the legislature instituted some reforms last session. The Center Square...
-
ransomnote: I put my notes on the video excerpts in itallicsRetard Finder@IfindRetards·14hThese retards a [redacted for Free Republic] insane.@Surge_Philly is doing big things in this space, I'm seeing his vids everywhere from other people. Might be worth a follow.ransomnote: a protestor harrasses him by repeatedly shrieking her demand ransomnote: the reporter is told not to interact with the group, get the mic out of the officer's face, that it's a permitted event and he must move to another side of the street. ransomnote: The reporter is told he will be arrested for 'pushing on' the officer (might mean continuing to...
-
4 faces. Which mountain face, which section of the country?
-
The prime minister and foreign secretary were involved in arguing for the kick-off time for England's World Cup match against Mexico not to be moved earlier - as mooted by Fifa in the days before the game. Sir Keir Starmer instructed officials to make the case, backed by the Football Association, that the match should remain in its original time slot, as first reported by the Sun newspaper. Yvette Cooper spoke to the British ambassador to Mexico, to ask that British diplomats made representations against a change, to ensure that the 3,000 travelling England fans didn't miss the match as...
-
After years of ignoring the world's most popular sport, Americans finally took a keen interest in soccer after discovering how much it can irritate Europeans. With social media flooded by outraged Europeans crying about having to play the U.S. team at its full strength, Americans were struck by a sudden epiphany. "So this is why people love soccer," said local man Brad Stephens, watching the Belgian coach cry like a baby. "All these years, I never understood it. Aw, look at those big crocodile tears! I just never knew how much rage and anguish we could put Europeans through with...
-
Former President Joe Biden ran as the steady moderate who would restore normalcy. In practice, his presidency became something stranger: a cognitively declining president whose White House staff, driven by "Trump derangement syndrome," used his office to reverse policies that were working and to impose measures that would have been considered extreme even during the 2016 election.
-
The ancient dispute over ownership of UNIX, and perhaps Linux too, has returned to court. Again.As The Register has explained many, many, times since this matter first went to court in 2003, the roots of the case are the 1998 alliance between IBM and a company called the Santa Cruz Operation which sold a version of UNIX for x86 CPUs. Those two companies, plus Intel and Sequent, created “Project Monterey” – an effort to create a unified version of UNIX that could run on multiple processors.By 2001, Project Monterey was close to delivering a unified UNIX, an achievement made possible...
-
Desirée Townsend@Cheering4ChangeSenator Mitch McConnell has now been hospitalized for three weeks. The gravity of this situation cannot be overstated, especially given that his wife, Elaine Chao, appeared in China just days after his hospitalization to meet with high-ranking Chinese officials. The question now is about national security: if Senator McConnell has been unable to independently perform his duties, what safeguards exist to ensure classified intelligence briefings, defense appropriations information, or other sensitive congressional matters could not be accessed, discussed, or shared by individuals operating behind the scenes? And given the timing of Chao’s meeting with China’s vice president, what exactly...
-
HAVANA, July 6 (Reuters) - Cuba's national electric grid collapsed on Monday at midday, the country's grid operator said, leaving around 10 million people on the Caribbean island nation without power. Cuba has for months suffered from hours-long, and more recently, days-long power outages linked in part to an ailing grid and a U.S. imposed oil blockade that has cut off the island's fuel supply.
-
The VAR ref that ordered the still shot review of Balogun making contact with the opposition's ankle became a referee in Venezuela in the early 2000s. As The Athletic (NY Times) documented, Chavez had profound, politically driven influence over the Venezuelan Football Federation. The VAR referee that flagged Balogun for a still shot review, a violation of VAR protocol that resulted in a red card, became a ref in Hugo Chavez's Venezuela. His name is Juan Ernesto Soto Arévalo.
-
Yo, Sly – Happy Birthday! Sylvester “Sly” Stallone, the actor who made a lovable losing boxer named Rocky Balboa into one of the most iconic screen characters of all time, is celebrating his 80th birthday on Monday. The actor, who has Ukrainian-Jewish heritage on his mother’s side but grew up Roman Catholic, embodied a hunky, unassuming, and very Italian appeal on-screen – it’s not for nothing that Rocky was called the “Italian Stallion.” Advertisement Stallone’s Rocky was known for the catchphrase, “Yo, Adrian!” that he shouted out to the woman he loved. Rocky, the story of a battered fighter who...
-
Dear Quentin, If all my contributions, along with my employer’s contributions, had been invested in the S&P 500, my balance would be more than $4 million. I could take a very sustainable withdrawal rate of approximately $30,000 a month, assuming my long-term returns were 7%-8%. If only my contributions were invested in the S&P 500, while my employer contributions went to the government, I’d have close to $3.7 million in the account at the end of this year, based on historical averages. I do better than many citizens because I’ve contributed at the highest level. You can email The Moneyist...
|
|
|